UN Warns Of 'Unprecedented' Afghan Civilian Deaths From Taliban Offensives
The United Nations warned Monday that Afghanistan could see the highest number of civilian deaths in more than a decade if the Taliban's offensives across the country are not halted.
Violence has surged since early May when the insurgents cranked up operations to coincide with a final withdrawal of US-led foreign forces.
In a report released Monday documenting civilian casualties for the first half of 2021, the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) said it expected figures to touch their highest single-year levels since the mission began reporting over a decade ago.
It also warned that Afghan troops and pro-government forces were responsible for a quarter of all civilian casualties.
"Unprecedented numbers of Afghan civilians will perish and be maimed this year if the increasing violence is not stemmed," UNAMA head Deborah Lyons said in a statement released with the report.
"I implore the Taliban and Afghan leaders to take heed to the conflict's grim and chilling trajectory and its devastating impact on civilians."
During the first half of 2021, some 1,659 civilians were killed and another 3,254 wounded, the UNAMA report said -- a 47 percent increase on the same period last year.
The rise in civilian casualties was particularly sharp in May and June -- the initial period of the Taliban's current offensives -- with 783 civilians killed and 1,609 wounded, it added.
"Particularly shocking and of deep concern is that women, boys and girls made up of close to half of all civilian casualties," the report said.
UNAMA blamed anti-government elements for 64 percent of civilian casualties -- including some 40 percent caused by the Taliban and nearly nine percent by the jihadist Islamic State group.
About 16 percent of casualties were caused by "undetermined" anti-government elements.
But Afghan troops and pro-government forces were responsible for 25 percent, the report added.
UNAMA said about 11 percent of casualties were caused by "crossfire" and the responsible parties could not be determined.
The Taliban's ongoing assault has seen the insurgents capture half of Afghanistan's districts and border crossings, as well as encircling several provincial capitals.
The fighting is largely in the rugged countryside, where government forces and insurgents clash daily.
The Taliban rejected the UN report.
"In the past six months, the Mujahideen of the IE (Islamic Emirate) have not deliberately killed civilians anywhere or carried out attacks that could have resulted in civilian casualties," the Taliban said in a statement.
The release of the report comes as fighting continued across Afghanistan, with the Pakistan military saying Monday that at least 46 members of the Afghan security forces had fled across the border into Pakistan to seek shelter.
But a spokesman for the Afghan security forces said those claims were "untrue".
Last week, Human Rights Watch said there was "growing evidence" that the Taliban were committing atrocities against civilians in areas they had captured -- including in Spin Boldak, the town near the border with Pakistan they took earlier this month.
Afghan security forces spokesman Ajmal Omar Shinwari said about 400 people had been "taken out of their houses" in Spin Boldak by the Taliban in recent days, and that 100 of them had been killed.
He did not offer details on the fate of the remaining 300.
UNAMA meanwhile also noted a resurgence of sectarian attacks against the country's Shiite Hazara community, resulting in 143 deaths.
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